20/20 - True Crime Vault: Dying to Meet You
Episode Date: May 12, 2026After a popular local musician is found dead, covert police surveillance uncovers horrific murders in Colorado and exposes a killer. (OAD 6/2/23) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices....com/adchoices
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When you did see the body, what was your impression of what had happened to Scott Sessions?
There was rage involved in it.
Absolute horror that somebody could be treated that way.
The body had been wrapped in plastic sheeting.
It was a man and his head had been covered and duct taped as well, and his body had been burned.
And it was like, what?
We found your son. He is deceased.
It was like somebody had punched to me.
the gut.
At this point, police are scrambling for clues.
Anything that might lead them to Scott Sessions killer.
About girlfriends.
He got an elevator record there.
He became very jealous.
You get really angry.
When they find a guy like him that they fall for,
then they got to start remaking that he was not to be changed.
You meet somebody that you think might be a great person to start dating, and then all of a sudden your life is gone.
But before it's all over, there will be a second body.
It's hard to hide blood when it's everywhere.
We had a sold-out two-night concert at Candleight Dinner Playhouse.
It was February 10th.
2020, it was a Monday night.
Scott Sessions was in my Elvis tribute base.
He was a trumpet player.
I had been promising Scott for months
that I would make it to one of his gigs.
We bought our tickets the minute they went on sale,
and I was going to get to see Scott play
for the first time in forever.
It was pretty exciting.
As he got closer and closer to start time,
you know, Scott wasn't there.
It was weird because Scott had failed to show up for the gig,
something Scott doesn't do.
He was always ridiculously early to the gig,
and always ready to go, dressed looking good.
When the curtain opened and he wasn't there,
we thought, well, maybe he'll show up in a little bit.
And if I remember correctly, it was starting to snow.
It was snowy, it was cold.
Scott didn't show up.
Yeah, in the back of my mind, I had a bad feeling.
We were all trying to figure out what had happened.
Our story begins here in Greeley, Colorado.
It's about an hour north of Denver,
and its community built on cattle, oil, and agriculture,
but one that has a thriving blue scene.
Billy Colorado.
We're about 115,000 people, primarily agriculture.
We have been known for our beef in this area forever.
People are friendly, and it has a small town field.
We're located in this pristine little valley
where we have the best of both worlds.
53-year-old Scott Sessions grew up here,
in Greeley. He was part of the local music scene. He played his trumpet at some of the local bars here.
But some say that his personality played louder than his horn.
He started playing, oh, probably eight or nine.
There's a picture with that trumpet holding it across his chest.
That trumpet's bigger than he is.
His high school teacher said, hey, you ought to play in the jazz group.
And I think at that time, he was a little bit.
he really started to getting interested in playing the trumpet.
When he put that trumpet to his lips was...
I've known Scott since high school.
We've been friends for the last 40 years.
He always wanted everybody to be happy and to get along.
He was a very caring person.
He cared about people, cared about helping others out.
Scott was very much a people person.
He was just a good guy.
just a good guy. Music made him larger than life. He was always on. There was no off switch
with Scott Sessions. He was a very loud and explosive personality and that's what made him
great on stage. He played the trumpet in a Denver-based band called the Movers and Shakers.
His song is called High Rod Heller. It's incredible when you watch video of Scott performing.
When he was up on stage, he had the facial expressions, he had the body movement, like when he was
really hitting those high notes and he kind of crunched down and got the look on their face he
really got into the music Scott and I met in January of 2018 at a gig of his he was nice and thin and in
shape and you know he had this you know strong arms and yeah his he was very cute Scott's former
girlfriend agreed to do an interview but she asked that we not use her name Scott's really good at
love and he's good at expressing love he's really good with his words
and he would sing me songs.
Just all those romantic things.
When Scott played up on stage,
you know, women would grab his butt or try to kiss him.
I always called him fan girls.
Our band The Moves and Shakers,
it just exploded out of the gates.
They were competing in competitions
and winning them, and they were really beginning to go somewhere.
When my band started to do bigger concerts,
we added a horn section,
and Scotty was my trumpet player for many years.
Best trumpet player, Mr. Scott
obsession. He loved live performances. Scott loved being up on stage. He loved being part of a group of
musicians. Scott could lose his left leg and he would still show up to a gig. Scott was always known
to be reliable. So it stunned his friends and bandmates when he didn't show up for his sold-out concert.
It was Tuesday morning. I get a call from George Gray and I said, hey, Scott
didn't make it to the gig last night.
And he said, well, that's strange.
Turns out, that's not the only thing he missed.
They had made plans to go see his mom.
His mom wasn't doing well with her health.
He never came out, and I didn't give it any thought.
Those guys stayed up late or something.
And he thought maybe he just slept in.
I said, I'm going to go over to his house
and see if he's OK.
And George said, I'm really worried about it.
I don't know.
Something might have happened.
His father met me.
So I checked in the garage and Scottie's car was not there.
The snow hadn't been shoveled.
The cat hadn't been fed.
Scott was very particular about taking care of his cat.
It was the one thing that could get him to leave a party as if his cat needed attention.
Something was clearly wrong.
There'd been a snowstorm.
Maybe he went off the road somewhere while he's going for a drive in the mountains.
I went to the police department and filed a missing persons.
our report. And that was about new niche.
As that day went on, and we were all putting stuff on Facebook and texting his number,
hey man, we're getting worried about you, you know, what's going on, you know, we're concerned.
I got a phone call from the police department.
They said, would you be willing to come in?
The detective would like to visit with you.
I'm on the Pingree Park Road and I have a dead body.
I'm in Puder Canyon in the heart of the Colorado Rockies.
It was just down there that a snowplow driver sees something smoldering, burning up on the hillside.
I'm on the Pingree Park Road at the Monument Gulch exit, and I have a dead body.
Okay, we'll get help on the way.
Are you able to provide any details?
Well, there was a tree on fire, and I went up to put it out, and he's laying next to it.
Okay, and you believe he's found any help?
Yeah, he's definitely passed away.
He thought somebody had been out there camping and had left a campfire.
And so he was going to go throw some snow on it and make sure that he put out whatever fire was there.
When he got close to the plume of smoke, that's when he realized this was a body.
The body had been wrapped in plastic sheeting.
It was a man and his head had been covered.
and duct-taped as well.
He was found next to a smoldering log,
and his body had been burned.
Driving out here, this is as remote as it gets.
The nearest store, much less houses, miles and miles away.
Everywhere around us is just trees, forest, and snow.
Detective Justin Atwood took me to the very spot
where that snowplow driver made the deadly discovery.
So he literally walked up this pretty steep embankment here
from down below.
Exactly.
clambers up here to this smoldering log.
Absolutely.
And then gets surprised when he realizes that there's a body.
It shocked him.
It scared him.
It had been intentionally burned.
It had been wrapped in plastic.
And that plastic had been bound in duct tape.
I got a phone call from the police department.
They said, the detective would like to visit with you.
I should have known something was not right on the Sunday morning when he didn't come.
didn't come to go seize him. We wanted to make sure that we made contact with Stan as soon as
possible. So it was about 4.30, 5 o'clock when the detective said we found your son. He is
deceased. Stan immediately broke the news of Scott's death to his ailing wife. She said,
who would want to kill my Scotty? It's a very difficult thing.
to tell somebody that their loved one's deceased.
Emotionally, it's difficult.
In Greeley, the music community is morning the loss of a gifted trumpet player.
Sessions was found dead on February 10th by a snowplow driver in Bellevue.
Mr. Sessions was ultimately identified with a fingerprint reader during the course of the autopsy.
If you've been to a local bar that plays rock or soul recently, there's a good chance.
You've heard Scott Sessions on trumpet.
Sessions' body was found alongside a road in Bellevue.
He was a person.
You know, he had a soul, he had a smile.
He had a laugh.
He was real.
I mean, it's hard to describe.
And now, you know, he's just, he's just a body.
George called and said that they had found a body
in a remote area of the mountains outside of Fort Collins.
And my wife and I looked at each other and thought,
no way.
Heck, no, that's not Scott. It can't be.
He was found deceased, almost a captive.
almost decapitated and that his body was lit on fire.
When you did see the body, what was your impression of what had happened to Scott Sessions?
It was very deliberate. There was rage involved in it.
Absolute horror that somebody could be treated that way and then disposed of that way.
No one deserves that.
You don't get a lot of murders in Larimer County.
No.
And here you have a body that's only...
almost decapitated.
Yes.
This is probably the worst I've ever seen.
It was like somebody had punched me in the gut.
There was a lot of regret that I hadn't made it to a gig sooner.
A lot of regret that the world had just lost a very amazing man.
We didn't know at that time who would, who would have killed him.
Something had to go terribly wrong.
Okay, so where are we?
We're out in front of Scott Sessions residents in Greeley, Colorado.
This is where he lived prior to his death.
We came here to serve a search warrant.
What kinds of things were you looking for?
Well, the first thing that we're looking for is the scene of a disturbance.
It was your standard bachelor pad, single guy living in there.
It was fairly clean.
It had some clutter to it and stuff like that.
We were looking for blood.
Was his vehicle parked in the garage?
We tried to find a cell phone.
One of the major things that we were looking for was his trumpet.
The instrument that he played in the band
because he never went anywhere without that trumpet.
One theory was that Scott has been robbed and killed for his trumpet.
We were told that it was a very expensive trumpet.
We started looking on databases, pawn shops,
to try and find if there was a trumpet that was identical to Scots
that would have been sold.
We actually found his trumpet in his house.
It was in a closet.
It ended up turning out to be a dead end.
Investigators press on desperate for clues that could point to a motive or the killer.
They were kind of at a loss.
They didn't have a suspect.
It was important that investigators find out everything they could about their victim, Scott Sessions.
I was the last person he talked to before he died.
They get this call on the Saturday evening.
and he said, Dad, I'm back home and I have a date tonight.
Can I eat some water or something?
No, then.
Okay.
So obviously they began questioning his friends and his family, including Scott's father, Stan.
Well, obviously, this is a difficult time for you and your family.
And we want to be as respectful as possible, but we also need to get to the bottom of what's going on.
He was an emotional guy, and if he fell in love with a woman, he went clear to the core.
There was no welding back.
And this is kind of a flaw.
Without girlfriends, he had an elevator record there.
He had a difficult relationship with a girlfriend that lived in Greeley.
There was documented contacts with law enforcement, and there was a restraining order that was in the system.
Scott had several tumultuous past relationships.
And detectives wondered if one of them might have a motive to murder the popular musician.
One day after Scott's body is found, his car appears out of nowhere.
Who is this person driving a dead man's car?
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Whenever you have a case that's big like this, you start working it, you start living it.
Everything that you do was nothing but the case.
This was my first assigned homicide.
There was a huge team that came together to work in this case.
So we kind of prepared to not get any sleep for the next four or five days.
In situations like this, there's a lot of stuff that you need to start doing.
We started reaching out to his friends.
Does he have any new associates, anybody that nobody knows about?
Does he have a secret girlfriend that nobody knows about type thing?
There was a lot of things that we needed to do.
While interviews with some key witnesses are happening,
another set of investigators are busy analyzing data from local cell phone towers.
What they're trying to do is pinpoint exactly where Scott Sessions
may have spent the final moments of his life.
The cell phone provider was constantly retrieving data from your phone.
It's sending data to the cell phone provider as to the location of that phone.
Those records will also tell you last made phone calls, last received phone calls,
or last known telephone numbers that you sent a message to.
That tower is going to capture specific data.
Scott's cell phone last pinged three miles away from his house in Greeley, Colorado.
That was the last location where Scott's cell phone had been prior to his death.
At this point, police are scrambling for clues, anything that might lead them to Scott Sessions killer.
They have cops canvassing neighborhoods, and they find Scott's car here right across from that King Supers.
It looked like somebody else had driven Scott's car and intentionally left it in the parking lot of the supermarket with the keys in it.
One thing that was unusual was one of the floor mats from Scott's vehicle was found underneath the vehicle when the vehicle was originally located.
And that floor mat was also processed for potential blood evidence.
It tested positive on a screening test for blood.
However, we were unable to get a DNA profile on that stain.
It was pretty evident to us that this was a vehicle dump.
Police pulled surveillance video from the King's Super supermarket and surrounding businesses, including an urgent care.
And they were able to see the car pull into the parking lot.
They were able to see somebody get out of the driver's side, walk around the car,
and then ultimately walk away from the car on foot, and leave the car in the parking lot.
And that happened after they had already found Scott's body.
That was the first video that we had.
of our potential suspect.
We needed to talk to every single one of his friends
and find out who he's been hanging out with.
Investigators talked to two of Scott's ex-girlfriends.
Obviously we're here because your dear friend, Scott, has passed away.
Yeah.
I like to go out and listen to live music,
and he's a trumpet player, and I met him through that.
Dated for two years, and then I broke up with him.
And so during the music,
And so during that relationship, you had indicated that there were some troubles and stuff like that?
He became very jealous.
We'd get really angry.
So I decided for my own safety.
I filed a restraining order.
And that was for three months.
He's really straightened out.
He's the happiest I've ever seen him.
That's why this is such a shock.
A friend of his called me, and she said,
Did you know Scott was missing?
And I said, no.
And then her next sentence, well, he was murdered.
And I was like, what?
We were on and off.
It was pretty tumultuous.
And so we were seeing each other for a little less than two years.
When you would go do things with him, he'd hold you
and he put his arm around you.
I felt so safe and loved when I was with him.
So this is the last message I ever received from Scott.
Little did she know that investigators were already eyeing her as a person of interest.
They were collecting pieces of chewing gum and a hair sample from the ex-girlfriend's trash.
And there were a series of text messages and a 30-minute phone call between Scott and his ex
just one day before he went missing.
So I'm very sorry that we're here, and this is going to be a very sensitive topic to discuss.
We started to identify that there was a recent relationship.
There was a restraining order that was in the system, and that they had an argument where the police were called,
and we knew that her house was in the central part of Greeley.
We dated consistently until he got arrested on July.
15th, 2018. There was a restraining order put on him.
When we had a big fight here at the house, we started yelling at each other, and he ended up
throwing coffee at me. I told him to get the F out of my house or I was going to call the police,
and he left. It was pretty agitated when he left, but I didn't think much of it. I started
cleaning up, and then the cops showed up at the door, so he had called the police.
He reported himself. He thought she'll call, and then I'm going to
and get picked up. Well, he called and he got picked up anyway.
I wrote a nice letter to the judge. To me, it really wasn't that big a deal. I said,
please help Scott resolve this situation. And so he solved it and we moved on with it.
You're talking to him and they're asking questions. I could tell they started getting distracted.
We were in the middle of that interview and we get a knock on the door. We got to go right now. It was
It was on Valentine's Day, and we were out at the Welk County Sheriff's Office.
Investigators are speaking with Scott Sessions' ex-girlfriend.
This is going to be a very sensitive topic to discuss.
You know, they'd asked me if I had information on Scott, and then I could tell they started getting distracted.
And then all of a sudden, they just cut the interview short.
They're like, okay, thank you so much.
We get a knock on the door, and it says, you got to go.
We got to go right now.
After hours of questioning Scott's exes,
police get a new lead, one that would clear
his ex-girlfriends of involvement.
They served a search warrant on the 14th of February
on Scott's apartment.
During that investigation, they actually found passwords.
I raced down to 35th Avenue in Greeley
because we had broken into Scott's Facebook Messenger
and found out that at the same time
that Scott was talking to his dad on the phone,
Scott was having a Facebook Messenger conversation with whom we identified as Heather Frank.
Just a couple of weeks before his murder, Scott Sessions met a local Greeley woman named Heather Frank.
Heather and Scott had exchanged multiple communications via Facebook Messenger.
They were talking about her attending some of Scott's concerts.
In particular, she had seen him perform and she liked him.
It was obvious that they had met in the past.
What we discovered to be the beginning of the story, so to speak,
January 24th, there was some Facebook communication
between Scott and Heather that seemed to be starting
or developing between the two,
and it seemed to be romantic in nature.
The pair first connected over a shared love of music.
I met Heather at the clip, and that's when Scott met her as well.
It appeared, she was very taken with Scott.
She was a beautiful woman.
I remember the look on her face when she was watching Scott.
It was like, you know, puppy dog eyes.
Now we are trying to understand Heather Frank's life.
What is her lifestyle?
Where does she work?
There's a lot of stuff that we had to figure out at that point.
When I met Heather's friends, they described her as a fun-loving free spirit.
Tell me how you knew Heather.
I've seen her every two months for a haircut and a style.
And we took her hair from blonde to red, and it was like four-hour appointments.
So it's just you and her usually.
It's interesting in your line of work, you become kind of a therapist, right?
Oh, yeah.
That's what my business card says, hair therapist.
You put the hair color on, and the truth serum comes out.
She's very colorful, and she always had the best clothes.
She's very friendly, very boisterous, just a happy girl.
Just super fun.
Heather was a mom to three boys.
Her eldest son Alex said the two were inseparable.
She was pretty much like my best friend, and we did everything together.
My mom and my dad got divorced in 2010, and after they separated, it was kind of rough.
But us three boys always put a smile on her face.
She would be there for me when I had hard times.
She would just track me out to go do fun things and get back in the swing of things.
She was always blasting music.
She loved it.
Every time I'd come over, we'd always do dance parties, like little danceoffs.
She loved nature.
She loved going camping.
She worked as a server over at Doug's Daydiner.
People loved her.
I met Heather at Duggs.
We worked together every single day for those three years.
She didn't waste any time.
I'd been there for a week when she invited me to go out to a concert with her and have
really fun night and from that point on it kind of just grew every Thursday
girls night we always look forward to that that was our night we start out we
go the same place or the same thing and just rank eat hang out and have fun and
if we got off work early enough we just go walking around downtown Greeley
little shops a little hole in the wall bars just fun times she did tell me that
she had met somebody and he plays in a band and she really
enjoyed going to listen to his music because it was jazz.
She just said, met somebody and I've been meeting him at this bar.
It definitely just kind of seemed like an innocent little, I met somebody and I'm going to
hang out with them now.
I didn't ask too many questions yet.
I remember meeting Heather.
He had brought her down to one of our gigs in Denver.
He'd only met her a few weeks prior to when we'd gotten on this trip to go down to Memphis.
He says, oh, there's this new girl that I'm talking to.
So in the days leading up to his disappearance and murder, what were they exchanging?
What were they saying in those messages?
They were very friendly with each other.
They were making plans to hang out with each other.
There was a point, though, on the 8th of February, where the tone of those messages changed.
You could actually see the different tone.
It was more of a, hey, let's connect, let's meet, come over to my house.
I was a little bit more direct and demanding.
At this point in the investigation,
police are putting the pieces together.
And they realized that the date Scott told his father about on February 8th
was actually with Heather Frank.
We were seeing that leading up to the last time
that Scott had a conversation with his dad's stand,
about 5.30 in the evening, almost 6 o'clock in the evening on February 8th,
was that he said, hey, dad, found the door that I'm going.
to and I'll talk to you later. I'll see you tomorrow. I love you, talk to you later.
And that was the last conversation that we know Scott to ever have.
By that time they had pulled the phone records for Scott Sessions and they had started
to put those pieces of the puzzle together and realized that Scott Sessions phone had traveled
to the area of Heather's apartment. It started pinging in the area of Heather's apartment
and they also knew that his phone had stayed there overnight.
But at that time, the fact that his phone eventually dies in her apartment or gets shut off one or the other,
and they never found his phone, was very telling for detectives.
Police have zeroed in on Heather Frank as the last person to see Scott Sessions alive.
So we had to be very cautious about what our next steps were.
We can't just go storming in there and say, hey, Heather, what are you doing?
And what happened to Scott?
Well, I remember very vividly pulling into this cul-de-sac.
There was a vehicle that was there that had some damage to the front of it,
and it looked like it had driven in a snowstorm.
It had very, very bright red dirt on the side of it.
I've already discovered this security camera footage.
You can see the car is driving westbound up the canyon.
and heading towards Pingree Park.
Where's this car going?
And could it lead to the killer?
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Investigators seem to be on the right path with Heather Frank, and now they need to know more.
Detectives.
They can't say for sure that Scott Sessions died at Heather's apartment, but they can start watching behaviors.
We started writing cell phone data record warrants for Heather Frank.
At the same time, we're doing this background check and finding out that she had a very difficult relationship with a subject, Kevin Eastman.
Usually whenever she got a new boyfriend, the first thing she would do is introduce us three to the person she was seen.
In the beginning, Kevin, he was always very nice and always interested in our lives, like, how was your day?
How'd work go?
You know, just trying to become closer with us.
Kevin is an oil field worker.
He had worked here in Greeley.
Kevin was previously married and had a daughter.
He'd been dating Heather for more than five years.
Kevin probably proposed that I know of three or four times.
She didn't want to be tied to that forever.
But as hard as she tried to get away from him,
it just got harder and harder every time, it seemed like.
There were a number of police reports where she had been the victim of,
domestic violence at the hands of Kevin Eastman.
She didn't want to continue talking to him, but they'd still see each other from time to time.
But it wasn't until the end of the year of 2019 when she told us that she had finally told him that she's done.
Despite telling friends and family otherwise, Kevin appeared back in Heather's life in February 2020.
My mom called and asked if me and my husband and my two brothers would all like to go out and eat.
And I heard someone whispering in the background.
Me and my husband, we didn't make it neither to my brother Christian.
My brother Blake and his girlfriend, they ended up going.
After Blake came home, he told me that Kevin was back.
He was there at dinner with him.
This was after they posted on the news that there was a body found.
up in Pingree Park.
So while Heather's family learned that cabin resurfaced,
police learned who owned that mysterious car
that had been parked in front of Heather's apartment.
We identified that the vehicle that I had seen
that had the mud on the side of it
belonged to Kevin Eastman, it registered to him.
So all this stuff was starting to come together
that we're going down the right path that we need.
Detectives decided they are gonna now start to surveil them.
We wrote,
warrant asking a judge to grant us permission to look at Kevin Eastman's cell phone as well.
And when we got those records back, we started putting those records together and trying
to look at the last known locations.
Investigators realize that Scott, Heather and Kevin's phones are all in the same place
at the same time on February 8th, the night that Scott disappeared.
All three cell phones were in the same location at the same time.
And then Scott's cell phone disappears.
It's not registering anymore.
At this point, Kevin Eastman and Heather Frank are both suspects
in the disappearance and death of Scott Sessions.
We got a tracker on Heather Frank's vehicle,
as well as Kevin Eastman's vehicle.
We decided instead of having a law enforcement officer
parked on their street 24 hours a day,
watching their front door, watching when they leave,
we can put a pole camera on there,
and we can remotely watch.
So you actually had a camera
that you had the utility companies put up on that pole.
Yes, almost to the top.
It was attached facing towards Heather's apartment,
that building right there.
They were hoping to figure out
when they were coming and going
and being able to follow them and do other things.
We had a tracker on the vehicle,
so we were able to see they drove to Loveland,
to Best Buy, to Victoria's Secret.
Not a lot of information that they're involved in something.
Police didn't notice anything suspicious while they're surveilling Heather and Kevin,
but more data from their phone starts to come in.
And police get a big break in the case.
On the morning of the 9th, about 7 o'clock in the morning,
we could see that Kevin Eastman's cell phone and Heather Frank's cell phone
left her apartment at the same time and traveled the same path.
The cell phones stopped pinging at Ted's place,
as a gas station off of Highway 14 and Highway 287 in Larmor County.
About the same time where you would go into the mountains and lose connectivity to your cell phone.
Based off of the last known direction of travel of Heather Frank and Kevin Eastman's cell phone,
we knew that this vehicle had to pass by the Michiwaka.
The Michiwaka amphitheater had cameras outside and we knew that we could get vehicle
traffic traveling eastbound and westbound on Highway 14 going up to Pingree Park.
The way the surveillance camera is positioned, it shows Kevin's Subaru passing the restaurant going westbound up the canyon.
I think it was 8.37 in the morning.
This footage shows Kevin's car driving toward the area the body was found just three hours after Scott's cell phone dies at Heather Frank's house.
Same damage that I saw on his vehicle parked outside of Heather Frank's apartment was on the camera at the Mishawaka.
Then we see what would appear to be his Subaru traveling the opposite direction.
I think it was 1130 or so later that morning.
So there was about a three-hour time frame where it looked like Kevin's vehicle was up in
the canyon in the area generally of Pingree Park.
That was our third major break to this case.
That vehicle passing by the Michiwaka, the cell phone records leading up to Pingree
Park and then going back to her apartment.
We started writing warrants for people's arrests for the murder of Scott Sessions.
On February 15th, about 5.30 in the evening, we saw Heather Frank leaving her apartment with
Kevin Eastman walking directly behind her.
This is the moment that turned the case upside down.
One of these people will never be seen again.
It took everything I had to not scream.
Why?
I'm sure that you've seen stuff in the news about...
somebody disappearing from greed.
Our friend Scott was killed in one of the most brutal killings ever.
They found him, but now someone else in the area is missing.
Her children don't know where she's at.
Her boss doesn't know where she's at.
It had to be some sort of love triangle gone wrong.
All they have is this one man to guide them in a six-hour police interview, unlike anything
you've ever seen.
My eyes gotten all screwed up.
All right, this is almost three hours in, and he's alone in the room.
Don't please, your father.
Let me help his man get to the bottom of his case, please.
Do you think at this point that Kevin Eastman is dangerous?
Where was the blood at?
It's fucking where.
I was like, whoa.
What really happened to Skisman?
happened to Scott Sessions.
Oh, please.
No, it's not detailed.
It's not detailed.
No, I don't want any of it.
Do you think this is all theater?
Somewhere among the 110,000 Greeley, Colorado residents, a killer roams free.
Cops are on the hunt for Scott Sessions' murderer, and they focus their attention on a waitress and a former oil rig worker.
And that focus is, thanks to large part,
to a camera pointed right in their direction.
It's the day after Valentine's Day, about 5.30 p.m.
And Heather Frank and Kevin Eastman come out of her apartment.
They load into his silver Subaru.
Heather is carrying a jacket in her hands.
She looks almost unsteady on her feet as she's walking out.
They're not having a conversation.
And she gets into the passenger side of the vehicle.
One of them is never coming back.
And this is a key moment in the case because it's being captured by a surveillance camera set up on a light pole across the street.
We have a pole camera up. We have trackers on the vehicles. So we decided that night that we're going to go home now.
Our team's going to power down for a night, get a good night's sleep, and that we were going to come back to work the next morning at 6, 7 o'clock in the morning, and start this case back up again.
The plan is to arrest Frank and Eastman the following morning.
But while the investigators are trying to get some rest, Kevin Eastman is not.
He's driving far and wide into a rural area, and overnight he'll be making multiple stops.
The first stop is to the home of a man named Troy Bunnell.
Troy Bonnell runs his own trucking company, essentially, and Troy is always needing help.
and assistance with that, and that's actually how Troy and Kevin are connected.
They used to work together in the past.
So I came to the office and Donnie Robbins called me and he says some strange stuff happened
overnight while we were sleeping and we had a tracker that was going off on Kevin Ethan's
vehicle all throughout the Pawnee grasslands.
That concerned me enough that he is destroying evidence.
I want to get out here and see what he's doing.
Donnie Robbins is a no-nonsense lawman.
no-nonsense lawmen who has spent a lifetime working major crimes.
He's running this investigation.
Do you think at this point that Kevin Eastman is dangerous?
Oh yeah, for sure.
Suspect him being armed at least with a knife, obviously, because of the way that Scott Sessions
was murdered.
In the early morning hours, the GPS tracker tells Robbins that Eastman's vehicle has been down
by a river crossing.
a bad place to get rid of evidence. So Robbins heads in that direction. But then he sees smoke.
And the veteran investigators experience tells him where there's smoke, there's fire.
And then you're thinking, uh-oh.
So that's when I decided I probably needed to drive by there to see exactly what was going on with that smoke.
Upon his arrival at Troy Bownells, he sees who he positively identifies as Kevin Eastman
wearing a baseball cap and tending this fire.
It's a very rural area.
Some people burn their trash.
What was uncomfortable was he couldn't see Heather Frank.
He could see Kevin Eastman.
The other thing about Donnie Robbins at that point, though,
is he has no backup.
He's out there by himself.
He's not in a marked car.
He's looking at a guy who's got a warrant for murder.
At that point in time, we don't even have a search warrant
for that property.
So while the suspect is occupied at the burn pit,
Robbins makes a quick detour to survey that river crossing.
But when he returns to the Bonnell property, Eastman is driving away.
And the two cars actually pass each other.
Lieutenant Robbins actually sees Kevin Eastman driving north on Kennerwood 45.
I turned around and began to follow him.
And we ended up going to a small town called Cursey.
And at that point is when Sergeant Robbins,
decided that he needed to make contact.
It's early here at Phillips 66.
And until now, Sartre Robinson has been keeping a safe distance as he follows Eastman.
But earlier that morning, he had seen him burn something in that fire pit.
And he's right there at the first gas pump filling a gas canister.
And Robbins decides he cannot allow him to burn anything else.
He pulls in behind him.
at the gas station.
Kevin is standing outside of his vehicle
and he's pumping fuel into a portable gas can.
Obviously, already a burned pit over there.
He's been burning something in.
Scott Sessions' body was burned.
So I had, like I said, concerns
that he was going to take that gas can
and probably use it as an accelerant
to destroy evidence of some kind.
From the moment Eastman pulled in,
security cameras captured it all.
So you arrest him. You pull out your pistol.
Pull out my pistol.
How far away are you from him?
Ten yards, maybe.
What do you say?
He didn't say anything.
What do you say?
Sheriff's office, you're under arrest, get on the ground, Mr. Eastman.
I'm pointing my weapon at him.
He turns around and looks at me and he gets on the ground.
I go up and I handcuff him.
I did search him.
And on his person, he had a wallet, a substantial amount of money.
substantial amount of money and a fixed blade knife in a cargo pocket of his pants.
We later found out that there were shell casings to a 22 caliber rifle or handgun in his pocket.
Did you ask him?
Where's Heather?
Where's your alleged accomplice?
After I advised him at Miranda, I asked him where she was at and he didn't, he wouldn't respond.
We executed the search warrant on the Bonnell property and then first contact we had with Troy
Now, we cleared the entire property, which was a garage, the house, and we didn't find
Heather Frank's, which I was concerned with at that point.
Just because investigators can't find Heather Frank on the property doesn't mean she's not
there.
And if Kevin Eastman knows where she is, he's not saying.
Where's Heather?
What?
Where's Heather?
She's probably ordered.
She's not work.
The Larimer County Sheriff's Office, they're serving a search warrant at Troy Bonnells.
They're getting a search warrant ready for Heather Frank's apartment.
And they're also interviewing Kevin Eastman.
So there's lots of things happening simultaneously with a bunch of questions that still need to be answered in a hurry.
A Greeley man has been arrested in the murder of a northern Colorado musician.
Complicating matters more. Heather Frank is not with Eastman at the time.
time that he's picked up. Her children don't know where she's at, her boss doesn't know where
she's at, and in fact, in the investigation, they find out that not even Troy Binal has seen
Heather Frank. So this is your office? Yes, we're at the Lamar County Sheriff's Office,
and this is the interview room where we had a conversation with Kevin Eastman for six and a half
hours. For six and a half hours, yeah. Your name? Kevin Eastman. Nice to meet you. Is he relatively
We calm at that point?
He's very calm.
He's very polite.
He's very cooperative.
My eyes kind of all screwed up.
So I had a crush.
So, yeah, my memory's not always what it should be.
During this interview, Eastman has this story about getting
a head injury at work that caused all this memory loss.
So much so, he just cannot remember being read his rights
only about one hour earlier.
How many times during that interview,
do you think he said, I don't remember, or I can't remember,
Oh, I don't know, 30, 40, 50 times.
I don't believe that I can't remember.
I'm sorry they can't remember.
Because I can't remember.
But Eastman's mind is not totally blank.
He is able to recall certain dates and times and conversations,
just as long as they have nothing to do with either Heather Frank or Scott Sessions.
Sunday, the 9th that snowed.
I remember it's known a lot.
Okay.
That's kind of different from the guy who was warning you,
I have a head injury and can't remember anything.
He's telling us that he can't remember things that happened two or three days ago,
but he's telling me stuff that happened six weeks ago.
He's starting to lose credibility with me at this point in the interview.
And I'm sure that you've seen stuff in the news about somebody disappearing from Greeley.
Is it a musician?
Is it a musician?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Did his eyes drop when you mentioned Scott Sessions the first time?
This is a person that is hiding.
He really does not want to be present in this conversation because he's very uncomfortable.
He does not want to face me.
He's hiding his face.
He's hiding his emotions.
He's hiding whatever his reactions are going to be.
Some of the more interesting moments in this cat and mouse game come when the investigators
briefly leave the room, but those cameras are still rolling.
Right, this is almost three hours in, and he's alone in the room.
Don't please, sir father, let me help these men get to the bottom of his case.
Please.
My appointment was on the sixth.
Do you think this is all theater?
It could be where he's actually feeling the stress of it.
Amazing griefs.
He's
down.
There and Jacques
There is Jack.
He's taken a lot of deep breaths
because I think he's starting to feel some of the pressure
where this conversation is going.
We're trying to get him locked into a timeline of events
prior to Scott going missing.
Up until this point, we have not
really been in your face, presenting facts that,
hey, look, you need to tell us this stuff.
We are getting very close to us transitioning
from an interview into an interrogation.
So you can see that I'm leaning in to apply
that emotional pressure.
I wanted to see what his emotional reaction would be
to asking him to say Scott's name.
So you're saying this musician guy.
Why don't you say his name?
You can say his name.
Scott, you're having a hard time saying his name.
He cannot utter the name Scott Sessions.
Yeah, he continued to say, well, I didn't know the guy.
Yeah, well, I never did it, dude.
He didn't want to say his name.
Eastman appears to have this emotional breakdown
when investigators attempt to read him
a transcript of the messages between Heather and Scott.
Oh, please.
No, it's not detailed.
It's not detailed.
I don't know I don't want any of it.
Kevin.
Are you thinking that this is someone who is a clever criminal?
I think he's experienced.
He knew exactly what he was doing. He had a plan.
But we need to be completely honest with each other, okay?
I can't, I can't be completely honest with you.
Originally he said that he wasn't there, that he didn't know anything about Scott Sessions.
And then he says, I was in the scene and I started dry heaving.
Can you get trash him?
Where was a big mess at?
I said, if you guys just get extra any good, they'll be able to find it for sure.
Many hours into this back and forth.
Take your head up and breathe, okay?
The one word that changes everything, blood.
It had to be so good serious for that amount of blood.
So there was a lot of blood there.
Where was the blood at?
It's where.
It's where.
What Kevin Eastman is saying inside the entire.
The interrogation room is shocking enough, but outside the room, another bombshell.
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As Kevin Eastman continues to bend but not break in his interrogation.
I don't know.
Man, this is just crazy.
Investigators are still hunting for Heather Frank.
They don't know where she is, but they do know where she is not.
And that's her apartment.
So they get a warrant to search her property.
Our job is solving puzzles using physical evidence.
In the living room of the residence, there were some shopping bags near the sofa, which
contains some paper towels, some cleaning products, and the box for a
cell phone. I did observe a black commercial style rug in the entryway and that
did appear odd and out of place. Underneath that black commercial rug I did see a
large reddish-brown stain that was consistent with the appearance of a blood
stain. It did look like the blood stains were trying to be hidden from view
of someone entering the apartment. That blood, as well as other blood stains located a
around that area of her living room were tested,
and those bloodstains came back to Scott Sessions.
It's hard to hide blood when it's everywhere.
Everywhere, everywhere, everywhere.
And at some point during this back and forth with Kevin,
the interview changes drastically.
Yes, it does.
You can see in some of these clips that Ryan had his cell phone out
and he was getting text messages from other investigators
as to, hey, we found
out this information.
So the first time you heard that Heather is dead is from hearing Ryan talk about it to
Cassie.
That is correct.
We found Heather.
And Heather is in the same condition that Scott is.
Don't know.
It's time to start talking.
The information came in that Heather Frank was found deceased at Troy Bonnell's property.
And it was like a baseball bat to my gut.
I was like, whoa.
And I was expecting something, but I wasn't expecting that.
And that makes the actions or the inaction of investigators somewhat controversial when it comes to that video of Heather Frank leaving her apartment.
At the time, it surfaces investigators are still piecing things together trying to determine what is going on.
So they do not move in for an arrest.
How did you feel when you saw it?
To this day, I'm still conflicted.
You're watching somebody drive away to the...
death. Could we have changed it or done anything differently? I don't think so. This is a very
unfortunate, sad story, and I feel horrible for her kids the fact that this happened to Heather.
The unfortunate thing is that decisions that she made played into the situation and how it
unfolded, and she did not deserve to die. It's a very powerful image that you're seeing right now.
It was just so shocking because I was like, what?
And I was just so confused.
First she's wanted on murder and then she ends up dead.
Heather Frank had been shocked to death.
An autopsy would later conclude she was killed at close range with her body
pressed up against a hard surface.
I got a phone call from my boss telling me that they needed help at the scene.
At that point, they had found a body on that property.
She had been wrapped up in plastic.
She had belling wire around her.
Her body was found and it was near the fire pit.
And he had placed her underneath a piece of wood that looked like a big door.
With the body being wrapped up, it made it even more suspicious.
And the fact that it was wrapped in plastic made it pretty comparable to the first murder that was involved in this case.
and that was that of Scott Sessions.
Happy New Year.
I assisted in the delivery of the notice for Heather's boys.
They were all living together and we all went with the coroner's office
to deliver that crushing news.
It was the morning of February 16th,
the detectives came to the house and they told us that they had found my mom.
I answered the phone, I said,
I said, Alex, are you okay?
He said, yeah, I'm okay, but mom's not.
And I just started bawling.
I said, please tell me she's still alive.
And he said, I wish I could or something like that.
He says, this is so bad.
Now, there are also some questions for the man who owns this property
where Heather Frank's body was found and where Kevin Eastman
was seen just hours earlier.
So, Troy Bunnell is brought in for questioning.
They found a body out on your property.
They believe it's a female, so obviously you know what we're thinking.
It's Heather.
Jesus Christ.
I got nothing to do with this.
Okay.
Bunnell says he was sleeping at the time Eastman was at the burn pit had no idea what he was doing on his property.
But investigators cannot take Bonel at his word, especially.
after they learn about a missing gun from his garage.
A 22 caliber.
Well, they're saying that she was shot by a small caliber pistol.
And that's what I had.
He's admitting that there's a gun on the tool chest,
and we're searching the property.
We served a search warrant in his house,
and we're not finding this gun.
Where is this gun?
But Al also acknowledges Heather didn't care for him.
She didn't like me for whatever reason.
I think it's because I kind of have some words with the Kevin, you know.
Back in his interrogation room, Kevin Eastman is implying that Troy knows more than he's letting on.
No more games, Kevin. Tell us what happened. It's okay. Tell us. You can tell us.
Troy's going to start talking.
That's okay. You guys go talk to him. He promised more than I do.
Who's in the burn pit?
It looked like to put on sale places in the burn pit.
But according to investigators, there are clues in the burn pit.
Clues that point to Kevin Eastman.
There was some personal items that they found half burnt in the pit
that appeared to be something that was heathers, possibly.
You know, they had asked me, you know, days later when they were doing their investigation
if I had disposed of, you know, lipstick and, you know,
make up and I think there was a hairbrush and something else but of course I don't throw
that stuff away I'm pretty much solo you know at the rants we need the truth the truth
needs to be told respect for Heather respect for her boys I'm Ted duck guys I'm sorry
after a marathon interrogation Kevin Eastman is finally arrested Kevin
he's here under arrest okay take the wall for me please
But he's got a plan.
He's going to point the finger at Troy Bonell.
Well, I'm anger with Kevin because I feel like, you know, I was taking advantage of.
If I could have words with him again, I'd like to, you know, ask him, why?
Why wouldn't you do this to me?
And Heather Frank's voice will finally be heard when this dramatic video surfaces.
Who did this to you?
I'm here at the Weld County Courthouse where after two and a half years, Kevin Eastman finally.
goes on trial. Eastman is charged in the murders of Heather Frank and Scott Sessions. Sessions
is a well-known trumpet player here in Northern Colorado. To be sitting in that courtroom and watch
that man be brought in to sit at a table with his attorneys was the first time that I had
seen Kevin Eastman in the flesh in front of me as a human being. It took everything I had to sit
there and not want to scream at him.
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen.
At its very core, this case is about domestic violence.
The defendant, Kevin Eastman, he didn't want to ease Heather Frang.
Kevin Eastman was the only one that had a motive to kill Scott Sessions.
These hands, these hands brought danger, destruction, and death.
These hands killed Scott Sessions and Heather Fiscians.
and Heather Frank.
These hands are the hands of the murderer.
These are the hands of the defendant,
Kevin East.
What really happened to Scott Sessions and Heather Frank?
That's what everyone is hoping to hear from the prosecution.
On February 8th, Scott Sessions never saw it coming,
literally ambushed from behind by a man with an anger,
fueled by jealousy, and a large,
sharp knife.
And do you solemnly swear or affirm under penalties of law?
To prove in its case that Kevin Eastman ambush Scott Sessions in a fit of jealous fury,
prosecution calls more than 40 witnesses.
It's obvious that it's a very large, sharp knife that went from the front to the back
that nearly decapitated Scott Sessions.
The prosecution also presented DNA evidence they argued linked Kevin Eastman
to the murder of Scott Sessions.
The biggest thing that we have was a pair of pants
that was found amongst Kevin Eastman's clothing
actually had blood on them.
The DNA profile that was developed from the cutting of the genes
indicated a make sure of two contributors
that's a make sure of Mr. Eastman and Mr. Sessions.
A speck of blood.
If anything, that's consistent with helping after the fact.
Those genes become important because that connects Kevin Eastman to Scott Sessions' murder.
At the heart of the prosecution's case was the abuse, they say, Heather Frank suffered at the hands of Kevin Eastman.
Thanks, why don't you have a seat to me?
The only thing that we really knew of Heather is what came out through her son.
Can you tell the jury about the first time you knew the defendant had physically harmed your mother?
It was in February of 2014.
When I seen her, she had a slash in her throw, like a knife, like a, you know, a cut in her throat.
Her, I believe it was her right side of her face was really beaten up, like really bad.
It was black and blue.
Her wrist had been broken.
So testimony came out that Kevin was not a nice man.
This pattern of behavior included breaking the arm of Heather's son, slitting Heather in the throat
at one other time, throwing her into walls.
They were at a bar, they came home, and he started fighting with her, and she told him to leave,
and he got pissed, and he grabbed her arm, and basically broke her arm, grabbed a doll kitchen
knife, and slit her throat, and then beat her right side of her face up.
That alleged throat-slashing incident was never reported to police, but in 2015, Eastman
pled guilty to misdemeanor assault against Heather for a separate altercation.
Please have you raise your right hand and do you solemnly swear or affirm under...
Her hairdresser testified that she'd come in to get her hair fixed and there'd be big chunks
of hair missing out of her scalp.
Do you recall an appointment with Heather in that September of 2019 timeframe?
Yes, I do.
She had a bald spot about the diameter of a golf ball on the top of her head.
She came in for that appointment.
I was parting out her hair and she was missing a golf ball size amount of hair on the top
of her head.
Like a piece of her scalp?
What does that mean?
So the hair was completely gone.
There was no, there was no hair there.
And I told her, I was like, Heather, what is going on in this section?
Are you having some problems with alopecia?
She's like, no, that's from Kevin.
And she said he grabbed a hold of her
and yanked her as hard as he could
by the top of her head.
Okay, we turn the lights on.
Ten months before her death,
police responded to another domestic violence incident
between Heather and Kevin
speaking to her at a Denver hospital.
We shared this video with the family's permission.
I just got to sign this call.
You want something to happen?
Just argument in the hotel room
punches to the left side of my ribs.
And I had to get out of there.
It was going to hurt worse.
So I left.
Who did this to you?
Kevin Eastwood.
You look at this video and you see her lying in that hospital bed.
She's barely able to talk.
How many times did you want you?
Three times.
A warrant was issued for assault in the third degree,
but Kevin was not arrested until after the murders.
Just like...
During trial, the defense acknowledged that the relationship between Heather and Kevin was tumultuous.
But they did not directly respond to the claims that Kevin was abusive.
This case was about domestic violence, and we wanted to make sure that the jury understood that.
Power and control, ultimately was what killed Heather, Frank, and Scott Sessions.
I think that Kevin Eastman murdered Scott Sessions.
Kevin attacked, you know, Scott Sessions, and murdered him.
I couldn't even imagine what my mom was going through at that time.
I don't think that she could have left.
And I think Kevin started to believe that Heather was going to go to the police
or Heather was going to go tell somebody to somebody, and Kevin was going to get caught.
And he had to eliminate the last witness.
Every piece of credible evidence in this case
posted one reasonable conclusion.
Kevin Eastman killed two people between February 8 and February 16th.
You saw no visible evidence that proves at all,
let alone beyond reasonable doubt, that Mr. Eastman murdered Mr. Sessions.
In jailhouse phone calls with his sister,
to hear Eastman tell it, the evidence against him is slim.
I don't think they really got anything for evidence.
I'm going to be a very unpopular witness because I'm very anti-Heather.
As the trial enters its second week, attorneys for Kevin Eastman lay out a much different version of events than prosecutors.
They allege it was Heather Frank who killed Scott Sessions, and then Troy Bonnell who killed Heather Frank.
Even Eastman, they claim? He was simply left to clean up the mess.
Mr. Eastman made an easy target for an accusation built on assumptions.
But he did not kill Mr. Sessions.
Ms. Frank killed Mr. Sessions, and Mr. Eastman helped in the aftermath.
Eastman's lawyers claim the motive for the attack on Sessions would be revenge.
The defense team would like you to believe that Scott raped Heather.
Heather was so mad about the rape
that Scott wouldn't leave her alone
that she lured him to her apartment
so that she could kill him.
And Kevin may or may not have helped her dispose of the body.
Miss Frank planned for Mr. Sessions
to come to her residence that evening.
Miss Frank initiated Mr. Sessions
to hurry up and come over.
Who was it that wrapped Mr. Sessions
had inducted before his.
body was burned and the DNA on that dot too with the strikes.
Although there's no evidence a rape occurred.
This defense strategy comes from an unlikely source, the investigators who interviewed Eastman.
She's saying that this guy raped her.
If you actually did or just that she's saying it.
I think that's good.
I mean, that's like splitting hairs.
I mean, how does it make you feel?
She says that this guy raped her.
That was an investigative interviewing technique to get him to continue to talk.
And so they threw that out as a potential theory of what might have happened.
And he took it and ran with it and adopted it and turned that into his version of events.
I feel like she had no way out and that she had to help Kevin clean up that mess.
I don't think that she lured him.
That was rough.
And I feel like with the lawyers, you know, on Kevin's side,
they tried to put it all on her, which really hurt me.
You please raise your right in?
Shelly Brinklow was character witness for her brother, Kevin.
Is your brother an angel?
No, he's not.
At some point, did the relationship between Mr. Eastman and Ms. Frank essentially deteriorate?
Yes, it did.
I was so mad at her testimony because she was again blaming Heather.
She blamed Heather for everything that happened.
You didn't like it.
Fair to say.
I did like Heather in the beginning.
Yes, I did like Heather.
In January 2020, you were not a fan.
Oh, probably not, no.
So Heather killed Scott.
Troy B'anel killed Heather.
That was their theory.
Mr. Bonnell panicked. He took matters into his own hands, and he killed Ms. Frank.
Please have you raised your leg, hands?
I felt like the whole world was watching. I had TV cameras panning in on me,
and I could hear shutters of a camera's going, and the courtroom was full.
Yes, sorry.
Bonel testified for the prosecution, and they seemed convinced he wasn't involved in any way.
But to try to make their alternative suspect very plausible to the jury,
the defense would throw everything they had at Troy Bunnell.
The day that Troy Bunnell testified,
he was cross-examined at length about everything,
and he took a beating.
You told Detective Schall, quote,
that you did not even know people,
referring to Mr. Eastman and Ms. Frank.
You said, and I quote,
I don't even know these people.
Correct.
That means I don't even know this people.
I don't even know you this guy.
You know, stop right there. Hold stop. Stop. I've never once ever, ever said that I did not know Kevin Eastman.
I mean, they asked me if I knew Heather. I mean, I'd see her.
Troy Bonnell does tell us that him and Heather had a very difficult relationship, that they did not like each other,
that Heather was very vocal about not liking Bonnell.
Your DNA was found in a pack of cigarettes on her deceased body. Explain how that could be, how your DNA could be on Miss Frank's DNA.
I had no explanation.
It was odd that his DNA would be there,
but touch DNA can be on items for lots of different reasons.
If that cigarette pack had been in his house,
and he picked it up and moved it,
that would mean that Heather was, in fact, there at his house.
So certainly that caused problems,
and it raised suspicion and turned him into an alternate suspect for the defense.
It was viable for that.
them in an argument at trial that had he been honest about everything, I don't think would
have carried much weight.
What we knew at that point was that the night before Troy was with another woman and that
the other woman had confirmed his location of what he was doing.
He had an alibi.
Yeah.
He had an alibi.
The defense was ridiculous.
I could not believe that that was their only defense was.
what about Troy? Well, what about Troy? Did Troy drop everything he was doing on his
ranch to go, to go, you know what, Kevin, I'll go ahead and take care of that murder for you.
I got you, buddy. No. So it's just, it's ridiculous to even think about that.
Two years have passed since both deaths and the government will still not be able to show you
any murder weapon. They will not be able to tell you where Ms.
Frank was killed.
I would be lying to you if I told you that every time I got a case that I sat there and said,
ah, I had this one in the bag.
Get 12 people to agree on what pizza to order.
Good luck.
Until now, the only man who truly knows what happened has remained silent.
Will Kevin Eastman finally tell all?
Mr. Eastman, is there anything he would like to say?
July 20th, 4.52 p.m.
Please rise.
After 10 days of testimony and less than 10 hours of deliberation, the jury has reached a verdict.
We the jury find the defendant, Kevin Dean Eastman, guilty of murder of the first degree.
I think when you hear a guilty verdict and a homicide, my initial thought is gratitude that the injustice of the death itself was compounded by the system not working.
As the court has heard repeatedly, Scott Sessions was a gifted musician.
At the sentencing, the district attorney played a video of Scott playing taps.
It was so timely.
It was like he was playing taps for himself.
Kevin got two consecutive life terms as well as an additional 27 years on some of the other charges.
Kevin Eastman was offered.
Eastman was offered the chance to speak at his sentencing, but he declined.
Mr. Eastman does not wish to make a statement at this time, thank you.
There was a relief knowing that he's not going to get out.
In my head, I danced a jig.
But the thing about guilty verdicts is this.
Nobody wins in a homicide.
Their families are devastated. People still feel unsafe.
I will not let him or anyone else determine my head.
determine my happiness for the rest of my life.
So Mr. Eastman, I have no quarrel with you.
And I basically turned to him and said, you know,
I forgive you.
I wish I was able to forgive him the way Scott Sessions' dad has forgiven him.
I'm not there.
I can't.
As for Troy Brunel, the Colorado Rancher, who says he was unjustly
dragged into Kevin Eastman's murder trial.
For him, closure has been hard to come by.
I've never been charged with anything.
I've pretty much been alienated from everywhere.
I'm still the one here trying to make sense of all this.
I lost a quarter million dollar a year profession.
I've been forced to seek employment and I'm planting corn.
Who'd have thought?
It's not as easy as everybody thinks.
I miss talking to her.
I miss her laugh.
She was a great woman.
She was a beautiful mother.
beautiful mother and she loved all of us and loved all of her friends she just
ended up being a part of something that she didn't ask for she was a victim can you
come show me what this is that looks like it's a very small memorial you got a
little bit emotional when you first saw it yeah when you get so involved in
the last moments of somebody's life you become connected to them
Scott's family hopes his spirit will live on through his trumpet.
What we want to do is find a good home for this.
Somebody that plays trumpet that's not as fortunate.
Maybe a young child.
A young child or somebody that we could give that to.
We should point out tonight that Kevin Eastman maintains his innocence
and is appealing his murder convictions.
He declined to speak with us.
That is our program for tonight.
Thanks so much for watching.
I'm David Muir.
And from all of us here at 2020 and ABC News, good night.
And you can find all new broadcast episodes of 2020 Friday nights at nine on ABC.
There was only one Richard Simmons.
It's sweating time.
Megastar, adored by millions.
Then one day, he disappeared for a decade.
Where in the world is Richard Simmons?
Now, his closest family and friends speak out for the first time to Diane Sawyer.
We had to be in a lot of pain.
It had to be in a lot of pain.
And what does Richards live in housekeeper?
The last person to see him alive.
Now say happened behind closed doors.
This is the first time I'm talking about this.
The mystery of Richard Simmons, a Diane Sawyer special.
Premiers tonight on ABC and stream on Disney Plus and Hulu.
